By Jim Garamone, DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON -- After meetings in Beijing with Chinese leaders
including President Xi Jinping, Defense Secretary James N. Mattis traveled to
South Korea’s capital of Seoul to brief leaders there.
Mattis met with Chinese leaders June 27 and yesterday and
“reaffirmed the importance of strategic transparency in the U.S.-China defense
relationship,” chief Pentagon spokesperson Dana W. White said. “The leaders
discussed a broad range of defense issues and reaffirmed the importance of the
complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization of North Korea.”
His stop in Seoul to meet with Defense Minister Song
Young-moo emphasizes the importance of the U.S.-South Korea alliance. The
secretary stressed that the United States and South Korea share democratic
values and common security interests. “The U.S. commitment to the Republic of
Korea remains ironclad, and the U.S. will continue to use the full range of
diplomatic and military capabilities to uphold these commitments,” he said.
U.S. Troop Presence
The United States will maintain current U.S. force levels on
the Korean Peninsula of about 28,500 service members, the secretary said. As
outlined in President Donald J. Trump's whole-of-government Indo-Pacific
strategy, he noted, the U.S. maintains an enduring commitment to a peaceful,
secure, prosperous, free and open Indo-Pacific.
The trip is Mattis’ seventh to the region since becoming
secretary. During his last trip to the region in early June, he called on all
nations in the region “to strive toward a shared destiny, one steeped in common
values and respect for international law,” he said.
The National Defense Strategy calls for strengthening
existing alliances while seeking to build new ones.
“I welcome the opportunity to reinforce concrete
relationships with stalwart allies while opening avenues for substantive
dialogue with others in the region, as I did in China these last few days,”
Mattis said.
Close Consultation
He promised the United States would continue its close
consultation with South Korean leaders and other partners in the region as “our
diplomats continue their work to achieve the complete, verifiable and
irreversible denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.”
The secretary addressed the decision to suspend Exercise
Freedom Guardian. He said this gives diplomats increased opportunity to
negotiate, increasing prospects for a peaceful solution on the peninsula. “At
the same time, the U.S. and [South Korean] forces remain united, vigilant and
ready to defend against any challenge,” he said.
This year marks the 65th anniversary of the signing of the
U.S.-South Korea Mutual Defense Treaty at the end of the Korean War. The
vehicle for discussions between the countries is the joint security consultative
meeting.
It is the Americans’ turn to host the meeting, and Mattis
said he looks forward to the discussions in Washington in October.
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